[Chorus: Juvenile]
Girl you looks good, won't you back that ass up?
You's a fine motherfucker, won't you back that ass up?
Call me big daddy when you back that ass up
Hoe who is you playing with? Back that ass up
Girl you looks good, won't you back that ass up?
You's a fine motherfucker, won't you back that ass up?
Call me big daddy when you back that ass up
Girl who is you playing with? Back that ass up
Girl you looks good, won't you back that ass up?
You's a fine motherfucker, won't you back that ass up?

[Chorus: Juvenile]
Girl you looks good, won't you back that ass up?
You's a fine motherfucker, won't you back that ass up?
Call me big daddy when you back that ass up
Hoe who is you playing with? Back that ass up
Girl you looks good, won't you back that ass up?
You's a fine motherfucker, won't you back that ass up?
Call me big daddy when you back that ass up
Hoe who is you playing with? Back that ass up

[Chorus: Juvenile]
Girl you looks good, won't you back that ass up?
You's a fine motherfucker, won't you back that ass up?
Call me big daddy when you back that ass up
Hoe who is you playing with? Back that ass up
Girl you looks good, won't you back that ass up?
You's a fine motherfucker, won't you back that ass up?
Call me big daddy when you back that ass up
Hoe who is you playing with? Back that ass up

What have the artists said about the song?

Juvenile:“That was the icing on the cake. It’s the song that I didn’t think would make it because it’s Bounce music. I have been doing Bounce music for years & it just went regional. It never went mainstream. I didn’t think people in New York and L.A.—people that weren’t from my area or are used to this kind of music—would like it. It just blew up. I was shocked. I always thought ‘Ha’ was going to be the song to really blow me over, but it was ‘Back That Azz Up’. It was crazy.

“I couldn’t leave New York. Every time I came they pretty much stuck me for another 2 or 3 days because I had to do other things. I’m just one of them people where I’m just happy I’m still here and can look back & say, ‘You know what? I did it all.’ I’m still doing it.

“Matter of fact, I recorded ‘Back that Azz Up’ & ‘Ha’ 2 days apart because those were the last songs I recorded before the 400 Degreez album. At the time, we weren’t doing too much drinking, but we were smoking in the studio. I got lit. You gotta remember, I’m from New Orleans & we were in Tennessee. The weed quality was 20 times better in Tennessee than New Orleans. So I had never smoked that way. I have never experienced smoking Dro or none of that until I got to Nashville.

“I didn’t want ‘Back That Azz Up’ to be a single, I wanted to be the street that tough or hardcore street motherfucker. But that shit wasn’t working, not in my pockets. [My brother and my close friend] were like, ‘You need to make songs for the women, that’s you’re selling point.’ I was like, ‘Yeah, I hear you, but I could rap too so I want people to get that part of me to.’ I’m kind of glad they forced me into the whole ‘Back That Azz Up’ thing.”